cursor.noCursorTimeout()
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Definition
cursor.noCursorTimeout()
Important
mongosh Method
This page documents a
mongosh
method. This is not the documentation for a language-specific driver, such as Node.js.For MongoDB API drivers, refer to the language-specific MongoDB driver documentation.
Instructs the server to avoid closing a cursor automatically after a period of inactivity.
The
noCursorTimeout()
method has the following prototype form:db.collection.find(<query>).noCursorTimeout()
Compatibility
This method is available in deployments hosted in the following environments:
MongoDB Atlas: The fully managed service for MongoDB deployments in the cloud
Important
This command is not supported in M0, M2, and M5 clusters. For more information, see Unsupported Commands.
MongoDB Enterprise: The subscription-based, self-managed version of MongoDB
MongoDB Community: The source-available, free-to-use, and self-managed version of MongoDB
Behavior
Session Idle Timeout Overrides noCursorTimeout
MongoDB drivers and mongosh
associate all operations with a server session, with the exception of unacknowledged
write operations. For operations not explicitly associated with a
session (i.e. using Mongo.startSession()
), MongoDB drivers
and mongosh
create an implicit session and associate it
with the operation.
If a session is idle for longer than 30 minutes, the MongoDB server
marks that session as expired and may close it at any time. When the
MongoDB server closes the session, it also kills any in-progress
operations and open cursors associated with the session. This
includes cursors configured with noCursorTimeout()
or
a maxTimeMS()
greater than 30 minutes.
Consider an application that issues a db.collection.find()
with cursor.noCursorTimeout()
. The server returns a cursor along
with a batch of documents defined by the cursor.batchSize()
of
the find()
. The session refreshes each time the
application requests a new batch of documents from the server. However,
if the application takes longer than 30 minutes to process the current
batch of documents, the session is marked as expired and closed. When
the server closes the session, it also kills the cursor despite the
cursor being configured with noCursorTimeout()
. When the
application requests the next batch of documents, the server returns an
error.
Refresh a Cursor with refreshSessions
For operations that return a cursor, if the cursor may be idle for
longer than 30 minutes, issue the operation within an explicit session
using Mongo.startSession()
and periodically refresh the
session using the refreshSessions
command. For example:
var session = db.getMongo().startSession() var sessionId = session sessionId // show the sessionId var cursor = session.getDatabase("examples").getCollection("data").find().noCursorTimeout() var refreshTimestamp = new Date() // take note of time at operation start while (cursor.hasNext()) { // Check if more than 5 minutes have passed since the last refresh if ( (new Date()-refreshTimestamp)/1000 > 300 ) { print("refreshing session") db.adminCommand({"refreshSessions" : [sessionId]}) refreshTimestamp = new Date() } // process cursor normally }
In the example operation, the db.collection.find()
method is
associated with an explicit session. The cursor is configured with
cursor.noCursorTimeout()
to prevent the server from closing
the cursor if idle. The while
loop includes a block that uses
refreshSessions
to refresh the session every 5 minutes.
Since the session will never exceed the 30 minute idle timeout, the
cursor can remain open indefinitely.
For MongoDB drivers, defer to the driver documentation for instructions and syntax for creating sessions.